Americas
Leading by example
Experiencing the loosening grip of repressive regimes and the impact of numerous civil wars, Latin America states and civil society were some of the most engaged and active supporting the idea of a permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), and the adoption of its founding treaty the Rome Statute.
In North America, rights groups were also among the staunchest advocates for the establishment of the ICC. The United States government has had a checkered relationship with the Court, but increased its cooperation under the Obama administration. Canada meanwhile has begun to reassume its role as a leading international justice supporter.
With many countries in the region dealing with transitional chronic violence, often spilling across borders, the support of states in the Americas is crucial in the global fight against impunity.
Since 1999, the Americas region has showed its support for the ICC by adopting General Assembly resolutions within the Organization of American States (OAS). Support by OAS states is today more indispensable than ever to make visible the importance of contined engagement and cooperation between the OAS and the ICC, and to preserve the message of unity in a region that has historically driven not only the ICC as an institution but also the principles behind its.
The Americas has also seen a growth of support for collaborative efforts to target impunity within the Rome Statute system, including among its non-ICC member states.
After an intense anti-ICC campaign under the government of George W. Bush, relations between the USA and the ICC began to improve in 2009 with the administration of Barack Obama, albeit when serving US national interests.
There has historically also been an encouraging degree of commitment and participation at the ICC by its high-level officials from the Americas region. These regional representatives include former ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo from Argentina and ICC judges from countries including Brazil, Costa Rica, and Bolivia.
In cooperation with key civil society organizations, the Coalition for the ICC closely monitors Rome Statute system principles in the region; works to achieve universal ratification; provides up-to-date information on ICC developments; liaises with regional organizations like OAS to broaden awareness of the Court and its mandate; and monitors implementation of Rome Statute crimes definitions and provisions to cooperate with the ICC into national laws.